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Published by weida1307, 2022-08-08 02:02:05

Love Story of a Commando

Love Story of a Commando

cheerful hooting and giggles all around. He stood there transfixed,
embarrassed, cheeks blushing red, highlighted more in his black uniform. I
released him as soon as I realized what was going on around, embarrassed.

‘Hey mate, looks like you are doing more than just saving lives,’ one
of the commandos chuckled.

Virat took a step forward, held me in his arms and kissed me. An
applause went through the crowds but all I could see was his handsome face.

Then he broke the trance and said, ‘Please go! Be safe! I will find
you!’

Human emotions like love, laughter, humility and concern inject
incredible strength in you to go beyond the darkness created by hatred,
atrocity and revenge. Even during the darkest hour of massacre,
hopelessness, narcissism or holocaust, these feelings have sustained
humanity and kept it alive or the world would have buried under the ashes of
hatred long ago.

I moved back to my queue and was taken out of the hotel soon after.
There was a huge crowd of the friends and families of the hotel
guests gathered outside the hotel along with numerous media channels.
There was stiff competition going on among media personnel to report every
single moment of the situation regardless of the safety of the people and
status of the ongoing operation.
It was a race above human sentiments where each one of them
wanted to succeed.
I looked around and saw numerous police vans and army buses
parked outside the barricades placed within the perimeter of the hotel. There
were many policemen and commandos taking cover among the shrubs and
trees surrounding the stone promenade along the seashore. There were some
more policemen simply to hold back the people from going near the hotel
beyond a fixed distance. There were many women and children rescued,
sobbing and crying out of hunger and panic. There were other people who
had made it out of the hotel, but their friends or relatives were still trapped
inside. A few were just onlookers whose curiosity had got the better of them.
I got to know that there were other terrorists attacks happening in
other parts of Mumbai and forces were trying to minimize the damage, save
innocent lives and fight back. The 51 Special Action Group of NSG
commandos that specialized in counter terrorism and hostage rescue
missions had especially flown down from New Delhi.
I shuddered realizing that I had survived two days of bloody chaos
inside the hotel.
I really cannot recall how I got back to the safety of my flat where I
was reunited with my friends. Miraculously all of us were alive. We hugged

each other as we cried, thanking God for saving us and mourning the deaths
that we witnessed.

We were changed people now. Nothing could have been a more
brutal life event than this.

As soon as I had gone to the bathroom my friends heard the gunshots
and were warned by the stewards to evacuate the restaurant. Two of the
stewards ushered most of the guests towards the fire exit staircases which led
them directly out. There were still some guests left at the restaurant who
refused to go out despite constant pleading from the stewards. There were
two more stewards who decided to stay with the guests willingly and God
knows what happened to them. Once out, my nervous friends fled after
waiting for me for some time.

Frankly, they thought I was dead by now.
None of us were going to be the same ever. The effervescence and
warmth that existed amongst us were lost like dew in the sun.
Nidhi could not sleep comfortably after that incident. Gaurav chose
to be silent about it, like it never happened. Dipti would eat, sleep, cry and
repeat the pattern and chose to wrap herself into a cocoon which never
opened after that. It was as if we never existed for her. We could never be
sure about Swami as he left the city the very next day without even bidding
us goodbye.
And I?
I would be drowning in my misery every single second. The agony of
losing him would burn me each moment. My arms would be sweaty all the
time, my heart palpitating and eyes would be bloodshot. Losing Virat once
again, that too after living an eternity inside those burning corridors, was
brutal. The hope would linger in the middle of the night but would soon be
replaced by sobs.
The fight between humanity and terrorist brutality continued for one
more day, eventually leading to ten terrorists being killed mercilessly by the
NSG commandos and one being captured alive by the policemen. A team of
Navy Marcos had also played a pivotal role before the specialized NSG team
arrived, in securing the arena and cordoning the Taj hotel once the terror
attacks were confirmed. Reports revealed that the terrorists armed with AK-
47s, grenades, pistols and other explosives entered the city through the
Arabian Sea and split into pairs of small kill teams with a sole aim to
annihilate the city.
Had it not been for our armed forces, Mumbai could have turned into
a graveyard but they could not cause the levels of damage as expected by
their handlers, all due to our armed forces who stand vehemently between
death and people, whenever an enemy threatens the sovereignty of our
nation or risk to civilian lives rises. All because it is not just a job but an oath

for them. The years of blood, sweat, toil and training our soldiers undertook
demand them to be the warriors their nation needs. They risk their lives so
that we can enjoy the liberties of being in the nation of the free.

And, you know a little secret, it is a soldier who prays for peace the
most, for it is the soldier who suffers and bears the deepest wounds of a war.

My soldier was lost again, leaving me behind to cry, to wait, to curse
and not to live as I should. The terrorists’ rampage gripped the stunned city
and held the world in horrified thrall. The terrorists roamed freely, killing at
random, mocking our desperation to save lives. Innocent people were used
as a human shield and many were taken hostage and later killed. The
aftermath resulted in more than a hundred lives lost including those of
common people, dignitaries, security personnel and foreigners.

The commandos rescued more than eight hundred lives inside the
hotel and many more outside. The policemen lost many of their brilliant
officers while trying their best to save the city. A few commandos were also
killed and my heart would skip a beat every time the dead and deceased list
would be shown on TV.

As they say, every cloud has a silver lining ; Mumbai stood united
and came out of the attack and the whole world prayed for it. The unknown
faces became the exemplary examples of humanity who rose, shone and
helped others during the hours of distress. There were many people who
saved others sacrificing their own lives. Ordinary people showed
magnificent hospitality to those in need and united against the demons going
beyond caste, creed and religion. The doctors, nurses, police and everybody
else present in the city worked with full force even in the wake of terror
threats. It was like the entire city versus the terrorists who were hell bent on
wrecking Mumbai to its core.

It was an attack on humanity, not just on Mumbai, and humanity
won, defeating the atrocities and flashing the message loud and clear that
humanity will prevail …forever!

8. To Love and to Lose

The days turned into nights and the nights turned into days. Life picked up
its pace as usual, as if nothing had ever happened. Such is the undying spirit
of this city. But those who lost their relatives and the survivors were scarred
forever. For us, the world was a different place and everything that had
mattered before was frivolous now. The power, passion, money, hobbies and
everything important was now in shambles. They knew, now, what mattered
the most—‘the love and life of the loved ones around.’

And I was amongst them.
I lost track of time. Our little friends’ circle dissipated. We now
behaved like acquaintances with each other.
Nobody blamed anyone; it was just that we were different now. Nidhi
and Dipti resigned from the job and left for their respective homes. Gaurav
took a transfer to the local branch office in his city. He felt safer there, he
told us before bidding us goodbye. I helped Nidhi and Dipti pack their stuff
silently and we bid each other silent goodbyes.
The emptiness of the flat was killing me and, at one point of time, I
thought of quitting too, but the thoughts of reuniting with my lost soldier
kept me rooted there. ‘I will find you’ —his last words kept echoing in my
ears. Visuals of reckless killing and savage violence would haunt me in my
dreams and I would wake up sweating only to clench my pillow in my arms
and cry. It was harsh. I still don’t know how I survived that time. Sometimes
suicidal thoughts would creep into my mind, wiping out whatever courage I
had, but the temptation to meet him again would keep me going.
I immersed myself in my work, which seemed like the only available
way to forget my miseries. I willingly opted for overtime and would leave
office past midnight only to stand at the Gateway of India, facing the sea, my
back always turned against the Taj.
The sea breeze would ruffle my hair, play a little with my soul and
then leave me alone, mourning over the things that were not supposed to
happen.
The Taj was closed for a few months only to reopen with glory and
grandeur like never before. It was repaired, and all signs of terror were
buried under the whitewash and new Italian marble. The Tatas refused to
bow down before terrorism and neither did any Mumbaikars. A waterfall on

one side of the lobby was constructed with the names of the fallen engraved
on it. It cascaded silently, mourning the untimely deaths of those who were
never meant to lose their lives so early, so unwillingly.

Outside, life was still as frenetic as ever, only with tightened security.
The auto rickshaw walas would still honk irritatingly, the women in
colourful sarees and hijabs would freely stroll around and tourists would still
click pictures of the majestic Taj, which would glare back at them with a
confidence to contradict the abominations that once happened there.
After all, life has an undying spirit to go on!
I was working on a client server project which provided various
functionalities and services like data sharing and resources regarding
Kashmiri orphans to multiple government offices in Jammu and Kashmir.
These kids primarily belonged to militant-prone regions of Kashmir, and had
been orphaned due to various conflicts. Encounters, terrorist attacks, riots,
confrontations with security forces, or sometimes brutal murders in broad
daylight, to name a few.
We maintained the largest single server in Mumbai, which acted as
the data centre to their government offices. Our job was to provide our
Kashmiri clients full IT support, update the database punctually, replace the
faulty components without shutting down the running server and keep the
connection live with the servers based in their Mumbai location.
It was a very covert project and the data had to be secure so that there
were no risks to those helpless kids being kidnapped only to be trained as
mujahideen. The risk of Kashmiri offices and rehabilitation centres being
bombed was high. They functioned as refugee settlements and there was also
the risk of vicious propaganda before international communities. The
Mumbai-based server was situated in a high security zone and was always
backed up by the best resources for uninterrupted communication with client
servers. The best IT professionals were maintaining it and I was the
communication head of the project who also played the middleman between
the Kashmiri clients and my project leader.
It was so covert that the agendas were never reported at regular office
meetings.
Basically, I would never have anything to say during meetings which
eventually led my colleagues to think that I had still not dealt with the
trauma and was sulking over my miseries, which was true but it never
affected my professional competencies. I did not make any new friends after
the Mumbai attacks and preferred having my lunches alone at my desk, and
burying myself in my work. I skipped social gatherings and office parties,
which had never interested me anyway.
Soon I was enjoying the whole new identity of a snooty, sulking,
crying baby from Delhi and I did not mind it too.

After surviving the Taj attacks, nothing else mattered!
I would get lonely on Sundays and other holidays and would spend
my time reading Eric Segal or E.L. James’ romance novels on my couch or
in a corner at Starbucks over a cup of my favourite Espresso Frappuccino.
Sometimes, I would also order basil, tomato and mozzarella cheese
sandwiches. I quite enjoyed them.
The hustle-bustle of the coffee shop, the chirping of young girls, the
quiet conversations of lovers or the casual meetings of business executives
would provide me solace. The smell of freshly brewed coffee and the aroma
of coffee beans, topped with the faint smell of cheddar cheese and
mozzarella on sandwiches, would make my senses tingle and once again I
would crave his company.
The holding of hands and nudging of the elbows of lovers who
frequented my favourite coffee shop would make me smile and wonder—
would I ever be able to live so casually, so sweetly, so normally again?
Virat was gone.
For a very long time, his voice echoed in my ears—‘ I will find you’ .
But then, it began to fade away and it felt mostly like a dream. Like he never
existed and I was just carrying some forgotten ghost memories. More than
six months had passed since the incident, but there was not even a faint
whisper of his existence.
Outside, it was all normal working professional corporate girl, but
inside lived a traumatised, miserable, crestfallen and heartbroken person!
It was like having a split personality. One would negotiate fiercely
with life and lead it on her terms and the other one would cry in the night in
despair. My parents asked me to either get back home or they’d join me in
Mumbai, leaving everything of their own life behind. My colleagues advised
me to quit and get married but I’d shut down and, moreover, refused to live
life according to anyone else’s terms.
My boss was the only person who looked pleased about whatever I
was doing. I got him extremely profitable outputs and that is what mattered
to him, besides the fact that he had a full-time willing corporate slave under
his thumb. In the era of human rights and labour laws, these things are
luxury. My mom was grief-stricken and could sense my mourning, but there
was nothing she could do about it unless I allowed her.
I was brutally cynical and hardened by every sob those days.
More than the attacks, it was Virat who took whatever was left of me
along with his fading existence after the event. He was not supposed to be
this ruthless. How could he do this to me, after everything that had happened
in those corridors and in that royal suite? He said I was his first love and that
he would come back to get me. But where was he now? How could he be so
cruel?

Perhaps he never existed!
One day I got a call from my Kashmiri link, a powerful bureaucrat
back in Jammu and Kashmir. He said he wanted to come over to the Mumbai
headquarters to manually enter some data into the servers and also wanted to
perform a quick inspection of the ongoing operations. He sounded stiff and
asked me to pick him up directly from the airport and head straight to the
data server building after that. I was about to ask him other details, like if he
required a hotel room, vehicle, etcetera, mostly out of courtesy, but I realized
he had cut the line rudely.
I stared at my mobile phone in disbelief and then put it away with a
sigh.
Government officials, from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, project a
uniformity and there hardly exists any cultural difference in their modus
operandi. There is an uncanny resemblance in their work ethics and
professional attitude. They can make you feel small, insignificant, and
intrusive all at once. These are some gifts the British have left us to deal
with. These kind of bureaucrats are obsessed with the kind of democracy
dictated by their organization. The space for new ideas and innovation is
lacking which could have been easily created if the basic set up of running
the country with government officials would have relied more on interacting
with the common people than directing them and calling it rules and
regulations.
Doesn’t it sound more authoritative than democratic?
I asked my company to provide me a vehicle as it seemed like a bad
idea to pick this arrogant person in a taxi which was the most I could afford.
His flight was to land by 11 a.m. at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport,
which meant that I needed to start by 8:30 a.m. from my place in Colaba to
be there on time. Mumbai roads could get pretty congested during peak
hours.
The humid weather and killing traffic, with all the honking and
chaos, did not help either.
After getting stuck in traffic for some good twenty minutes, I
managed to reach the airport an hour before his arrival. The domestic flights
arrive and depart through Terminal 1, which is still lovingly called Santacruz
airport by the locals. Fondly remembering its old glory days several years
back. There were a few nice bakeries and coffee houses outside the airport
and I decided to savour some airport snacks, loudly anticipated by my
growling stomach.
I had skipped my breakfast in a rush to reach the airport and now was
the time for some quality snacks. I ordered one whole wheat sandwich along
with an espresso and picked up the Mumbai Mirror quite happily. All this
was an early morning luxury for a corporate professional. But bad days can

be brutal and the romance between the coffee mug and my lips, which
insisted on long soothing sips, were broken down by the annoying ringtone
of my cell phone. I hated the call that moment. It was from Mr Durrani, the
client.

Even before I could say hello, his stiff voice filled the phone. ‘Where
are you? I have been waiting for the past five minutes.’

Five minutes? Really? He sounded like it was the end of the world.
‘I am just coming. I thought you’d arrive by 11 a.m. but it’s just
10:45 and I thought…’ I stopped mid-sentence and realized he had
disconnected the phone already.
I left my half sipped coffee and untouched sandwich and rushed out.
It is not every day that such delicious little delicacies get such a rough
treatment by their sophisticated buyers.
When I finally reached the arrival gates of Terminal 1 it took me no
time to locate the stocky short man with extremely fair complexion. He had
an imperfectly placed paunch which looked rather funny on his stocky
stature. But he was quite muscular, which I guess is characteristic of people
from the mountains. His grey hair was combed neatly and his facial hair
were trimmed. He was dressed in a civil servant attire—a pitch black suit
and a black tie over a white shirt with a small briefcase in his hands. He did
not realize one thing—that the hot and humid Mumbai weather would roast
him in his suit. The beefy, bull-necked official was rolling his eyes while
looking at his wristwatch the whole time.
Nothing remotely similar to my idea of a sleek-looking government
officer gathered over the years through Ajay Devgan movies. Sigh !
‘Hello sir!’ I put my hand out for a handshake.
He narrowed his eyes for a moment and grasped my hand rather
authoritatively.
The way you shake hands with someone speaks a lot about you. For
instance, the palm down handshake, when your palm is turned to face
downwards, projects immediate authority and domination over the other
person. I read in a self-improvement book called Good Grooming and How
It Affects Your Social Relationships. If it is to be believed then it was not
even two seconds and we already had negative vibes between us. What was
he expecting me to do? Salute?
For two minutes straight we shook each other’s hands and broke it
uncomfortably only to observe two more minutes of uncertain silence before
I decided to take control of the situation. After all, what is the use of being
an urban, liberated, free-spirited professional girl if I cannot even deal with
petty handshakes.
‘Welcome to the city, Mr Durrani,’ I said, breaking the
uncomfortable silence.

‘Hmm!’ Was that all he could utter?
Sheer disbelief was floating in my eyes, yet I was not ready to give
up. Do or die!
‘So what are your plans, Mr Durrani? Do you want to drop your
luggage in your hotel-room or would you just like to go to the servers,’ I
asked in a very businesslike manner.
‘Servers.’ One single word!
Poor me! Eyes still wide in disbelief.
‘Would you like to accompany me in my car or do you have an
arrangement?’ I asked again, not ready to give up.
If chivalry is a word then he surely was not aware of it.
Instead of replying, he took out his mobile phone, pressed the keypad
and growled, ‘Yes!’ That was it.
Not even a single second passed and a white Hindustan Ambassador
car flashing a red beacon screeched to a stop near us and two police
personnel jumped out of the still moving car and saluted him crisply. I
stumbled a bit and flinched, totally dazzled by the quick events. He got into
the Ambassador and uttered a single word ‘come’ without even turning back.
I followed him at once, not thinking about my own driver and car which was
in the parking area.
There was utter silence inside the car and right then, typical of
Mumbai weather, it began to mist just enough for the car windshield wipes
to skip and hop like a tap dancer as we moved steadily towards our
destination. The rain in Mumbai is beautiful. Then the petrichor emanating
from the roads and soil delights the olfactory receptors! I was tempted to roll
down the car window and stick my face outside and let the breeze play with
my hair, but I decided against it, sighed and let that thought go, with a very
austere Mr Durrani projecting a rigidly puritanical outlook sitting just beside
me.
Our ride to the data servers was in silence, save the swish of the
windshield wipers!
We finally reached the data server building which was situated in
Navi Mumbai Mahape IT Park. Navi Mumbai is a very well planned city and
known to be the hub of software-based companies that acted as IT solution
providers, providing software, hardware, data centre services or website
hosting solutions or many other services to offshore clients while the desi
employees would also be recruited by the same multinational companies as
cheap work force for clients abroad. These are some high security and highly
energized zones of Mumbai, known as the ‘Silicon Valley of Mumbai’.
Our technology-enhanced flagship office building was a state-of-the-
art nine-storey office built on the highest security zone of the IT park where
most government or intelligence offices were situated.

I could not resist the sight of the grandeur and glory that this facility
radiated.

Every aspect of the building from workspaces to the conference
rooms to a fitness centre and the parking space was thoughtfully designed.
There were large open floor areas and the top floors were set back a few
meters from the boundary in order to provide an outdoor deck, while the
ground floor was set back to form a reception and shopping colonnade. The
building was made up of frames, vertical tubes, horizontal and vertical plates
with an excellent view of the city landscape. There was a concreted trail
surrounded by shrubs and trees leading to the main building, enhancing the
natural beauty around. Utterly beautiful!

When we entered the elevator the others there glanced at him more
than usual. One could sense his legitimate government official persona
which was such a misfit in that high end corporate culture with people
roaming in slit skirts and linen shirts. He looked unmoved by any of the
glances, reflecting only sternness from his face. We stepped out of the
elevator to the eighth floor which was solely dedicated to data servers. We
went through the regular security check and I introduced him to the tech
guys who took him inside.

I heaved a sigh of relief and plopped down quite gladly on the plush
sofa which was at the reception area along with a Birchwood table. I flipped
through a few magazines, played a few mobile games, tried calling a few
friends, closed my eyes for a while and even strolled in the compact area for
some time till he came out with those two tech guys and shook his hands
with them quite warmly.

That hurt!
I had spent an entire day with this man, even received him from the
airport, and he behaved as though I was an insignificant creature. And look
at these two guys who were with him for some two hours but managed a real
warm handshake from him. The job of a middleman sucks actually.
The humiliation did not end there as I had to escort him back to his
government guest house in Naval Nagar where I signed all the papers on his
behalf as instructed by my company, made him comfortable and then headed
back to my place by nine o’clock at the night. Meanwhile I also got a nasty
call from the company driver who shot out some W words like what? where?
why?, only to hang up happily once he knew I’d return by myself.
That was one savage day in my life that went by in a jiffy with the
end result of me going to sleep quite miserably and hungrily.
Some days are just like that. You have no control over them. You will
scratch your head, curse the planet or simply keep going but it would end
only with the setting sun and sparkling stars up in the sky. There is not much

you can do about it. It feels as if some karmic wheel is rotating with all its
ferocity with you playing a pawn.

It reminds me of Bhallaladeva, the primary antagonist of the movie
Baahubali who possessed some sort of scythed chariot drawn by a pair of
horses in the Kalakeya War. The powerful chariot would be drawn by two
Guar bisons with three spinning scythes with a mechanism to shoot multiple
arrows simultaneously at small intervals.

Sometimes, life comes at you like his chariot, and you cannot even
run and hide. You get slaughtered and wait for it to get over.

Thankfully my day ended and I hoped never to see that arrogant man
again.

9. Life after Him

The next day Mr Durrani flew back to Kashmir. Before leaving, he gave me
a carefully sealed envelope to be handed over to the same tech guys. He told
me to guard the envelope with my life or so I thought from whatever I could
make out of his terse words. No goodbyes, good evening or even a smile, Mr
Durrani hurriedly turned around and left.

Nobody, I repeat nobody, had ever treated me like that!
I would ask for a different project if I had to deal with clients like
him, I decided. With vengeance in my heart, I headed straight to the data
server and literally tossed the envelope on Raghav’s table, once I got hold of
him.
‘Woohoo! Hey what happened? Miss Sunshine, you look angry.’ He
smiled.
Actually Raghav and I had been friends for a while. We joined the
company almost at the same time and we had a few management classes
together where I shared my bench with him for team management
assignments.
‘I am pissed,’ I replied.
‘Why?’ He looked puzzled.
‘This Mr Durrani, the same guy you met yesterday, is getting on my
nerves,’ I said.
‘Yeah? He has left I guess. He is quite reserved, but if I may say so,
nothing looks offensive enough to piss you off unless he actually proposed
to you on his knees.’ He chuckled.
‘Really?’ I stared hard at him.
‘Sorry! What happened?’ He pretended to be serious.
‘Yaar, I wasted all of yesterday running his errands and trying my
best to make him feel comfortable but all I get is this lousy envelope to be
delivered to you guys, and he never even thanked me. All the while, he made
me feel like a lousy errand boy! Imagine!’ I said it all under my breath.
‘Haha! He does not look that bad. In fact, he was quite pleased with
our work.’
‘Yeah! Yeah!’ I pouted.
His fingers were playing with the tapes on the envelope while he
conversed with me. My mood was already scaling towards the happier side

when suddenly some photographs slipped out of the envelope, scattering all
over the floor. As I bent to pick them up, a shriek escaped my mouth. It was
a brutal sight.

Pictures of dead, massacred kids were scattered all over the floor!
A few dead bodies were mutilated. There were pictures of people
carrying the dead bodies of those little kids, mothers crying. Some pictures
were taken from the blast sites with the backdrop of ice-covered mountain
peaks, where there were more dead bodies, children with no arms or legs on
blood-soaked crimson-red ground, contrasting with the rest of the white
snow-covered ground.
My stomach churned and my mind swirled. I clutched my mouth and
rushed to the washroom. I had to throw up.
Raghav hastily put the photographs back into the envelope, taped it
and entered the bathroom where I was trying to compose myself.
He held me by my shoulders, pushed me towards the wall and said,
‘Riya, have some control! What did Mr Durrani tell you when he gave you
this envelope?’
‘Noth…nothing!’ I was shivering.
‘Riya, gather your courage. It is nothing,’ he shook me violently.
Something hit me hard.
‘Nothing? You said nothing? Are you blind, those were little kids!
Hundreds of them dead! I saw the pictures. Okay? Brutally killed, lying
there on the blood-soaked soil and you say nothing?’ I growled back.
‘I deal with these pictures daily. It does not haunt me anymore.
Okay? So stop throwing a tantrum and behave like someone sensible with
whom I can talk,’ he hissed.
I was scared, distraught and shaken. I said meekly, ‘Yes! Tell me, I
am listening.’
‘Riya, I don’t know why he chose to deliver these photographs
through you. He said he had some more data to be scanned and uploaded
into the system but his source had not delivered it to him,’ he said.
‘Data?’ I was curious.
‘Yes, data! Information regarding Kashmiri kids through pictures or
stats are our data which we enter into the system through top secure lines to
maintain a record of the human rights violations and terrorist attacks in the
valley. This is top information which is relayed directly to the home ministry
and it is maintained as Top Secret and never revealed to the public,’ he was
whispering.
‘Why?’ I asked.
‘I think it’s because the Indian government doesn’t want to elevate
the Kashmir tensions or spread hatred across the country. Maybe the
government wants to safeguard these people and help them freely in their

own democratic way away from the hue and cry of human rights activists or
media glare. Or maybe the government does not want the enemy country to
speak to the UN about the failed governance in the Valley,’ he said.

‘Whatever! You see how brutal this information is? It is definitely
not for public knowledge,’ he emphasized.

I did not say anything. Maybe I was in a state where the mind stops
processing the facts only because of the sudden outburst of too much
information.

‘There could be opportunists who will misuse such classified
information to propel their propaganda and divide the nation, there are many
media channels on Pakistani payrolls to exaggerate the whole issue. Promise
me! You won’t discuss this with anyone. It would not be good for any of us,’
he said, looking me straight in my eye.

‘I…I promise!’ I said.
‘Now let’s go before anybody notices. Leave like nothing happened!
Please don’t fall or swoon or anything like that. You can do all that from the
luxury of your couch. Sob, cry out loud, break things, question the
Almighty’s presence in your solitude or anything else you feel like, but not
here. You are already looking pale.’ He tried to lighten things.
I smiled meekly and nodded obediently.
I left silently. I don’t know what pushed me all the way to keep me
moving normally. Once home, I drank one whole bottle of water to quench
my thirst and agony both. Then I sat naked under the shower, drenched, and
leaned my head against the shower wall, exhausted. I took a really long
shower and lifted my face to the cold water as if it would wash away all the
sadness my heart was holding now. When I emerged from the shower it was
quite dark. My stomach was rumbling but I did not feel like eating. I nestled
down into the bed and fell asleep.
In the morning, I got a call from Raghav, enquiring about my well-
being. He said, ‘I know how it feels the first time, Riya, and so I am
concerned.’
I did not say anything.
He continued, ‘Take a day off from work and hang out with some
friends or just have a drink. At least this was what I did to keep my
depression at bay.’
He told me that he had contacted Mr Durrani to ask why he had
risked giving the envelope to me, and he had said that I looked sincere to
him. His source met him that morning only and he could not risk taking it
back to Kashmir, plus he was pretty aware of our security clearances. All
such pictures were burnt and destroyed once uploaded into the system.
Raghav once again asked me never to speak to anyone about it.

After he hung up, I took the day off, but hanging out with friends did
not seem like a good idea. Instead I spent my day watching old Hollywood
classics like Gone with the Wind and Charlie Chaplin. Then I changed into
my jogging tracks and running shoes and headed to the Queen’s Necklace
for a walk along the promenade.

I sat there watching the city lights and cherishing the melancholy
music created by the waves hitting the shores. As much as I enjoyed Marine
Drive, I was equally worried. Perhaps life was trying to show me some sort
of sign, otherwise why would it decide to bestow all the adventures of this
world on my petite shoulders.

The Taj attacks felt like the apocalypse, the loneliness was killing
me, the withdrawn self was not helping as well and my job was not
interesting anymore. The battered soul still craved for the warmth that Virat
had once promised me, which now seemed like a distant dream.

The dead bodies of children were still floating before my eyes.
They would have been alive some time ago, playing and cuddling
their moms, and suddenly they became pictures to be saved on government
servers. It was brutal, something not meant to be and it was happening every
day in some place really far from here.
Sometimes I would confuse it with a nightmare.
Mumbai had always fascinated me with its magnanimity and
generosity, but perhaps it was not meant for me. I needed to move on with
my life and Mumbai did not promise me anything but haunted memories. I
could not wait anymore, I had to give up chasing what was never meant to
be mine. I decided to quit my job and move out somewhere far off to start
afresh.
While sauntering back to my place, I felt good. Relaxed, relieved,
liberated!
The next few days went by in a jiffy in the haze of my sudden
resignation. Corporate companies are very particular about their assets and
usually reserved about relieving an employee unless the head honchos don’t
want to kick out that employee by themselves or if recession is going on. I
went through a hundred counselling sessions of how continuing with my
work would provide me a better future.
I did not say anything but they could not understand one thing, that it
was not the future I was worried about but the past that kept haunting me.
The reckless, restless life in Mumbai had no meaning for me, just some cruel
memories.
My boss tried to persuade me to stay, but I was firm. My parents
were quite happy about my decision as they thought it meant I was coming
back home to them. But I was in a great dilemma. I wanted to move on to
some place really far away where I could hide easily without anyone

bothering about me or even calling my name. My parents’ place was
definitely not very promising, but after the resignation I had no reasons left
to be in Mumbai.

But you know as much as I loved being an atheist those days, I
realized that God never actually closes all the doors. The flickering bright
light would enter my life even when I thought there was no hope.

One day, I got a call from an unknown number. I was sipping coffee
near my sea-facing window and I picked it up quite lazily.

‘Hello?’ I said.
‘Hello! Miss Riya?’
It took me a while to realize that it was Mr Durrani.
‘Yeah! Hello? Mr Durrani?’ I was confused by the sudden call.
‘Yes! This is me and I heard you have left your job.’ The two-liners
were back again. Bingo!
‘Yes! But how do you know?’ I asked.
‘I am in Mumbai actually and when I contacted your company,
someone else picked up and informed me that you have left the job,’ he said.
‘Okay! But what do you want from me? I have nothing to do with the
company now and I am not obliged to entertain you on your Mumbai visits.’
I had been dying to say something nasty for a long time.
God does not really close all the doors. I smirked.
‘I wanted to ask you if you would be interested in working for us?
The job does not pay anything at all but we can provide you with food and
accommodation.’ He seemed unmoved by my remark.
My ears instantly perked up and I said, ‘Job? Well, what kind of job
are you offering me and why do you think I’d be interested?’
‘I really liked your work credentials and it would be great if you
could look after the kids in a school in Tral, Kashmir, which also provides
shelter to orphaned Kashmiri children apart from educating them. All you
have to do is to teach those kids about computers and other things to help
them stand on their own feet. It is a small project but we basically try our
best not to let these orphans fall prey to terrorism and get trained across the
borders in terrorists camps or turn into suicide bombers,’ he replied.
‘Okay. But I am not sure whether I’d be able to do that and that too
in Kashmir. Frankly my parents will not approve. The security risks are
high,’ I said absentmindedly.
‘See, you don’t worry about the security. The locals are very friendly
to the NGOs; it’s just the armed forces they hate and many of the army
personnel from the Special Forces keep a close tab on the government
employees there. Nothing has happened till now, apart from clashes between
the locals and security forces now and then,’ he said.
My heart skipped a beat at the words ‘Special Forces’!

I wish I would have known that God keeps leaving the clues here and
there, all you need to do is to pick it up and embrace wholeheartedly.

‘I will think about it. I really need a break from city life. But how and
when do I join?’ I said.

‘Look, I am leaving in the next two days. I can book your flights
back with me or else you can join me whenever you like. But it will be
easier for you if you come with me. Joining is not a big deal as I am the sole
in-charge. There will be some paperwork, but I will take care of that. You
can live in one of the accommodations in the shelter home premises, and
we’ll provide you with food from the common mess.’ He sounded eager
which was in contrast with his ever neutral tone.

He really wanted me to be there.
‘Okay, Mr Durrani, give me some time to think about it. I will call
you back,’ I said.
I hung up. The ball was truly in my court.
There was something about this offer that was making me think,
pulling me to pack my stuff and leave this concrete jungle of dead selfish
people at once. Maybe I was just cynical but there was something amiss in
the city for sure. Maybe I was gloomy or something as I had really loved this
city once. It would hardly matter to anyone if I left the city or jumped off a
cliff, except that, it would take a lot of persuading to convince my parents.
I was seriously worried that they would disown me after this.
I had always been reckless, but recently it was like I had detached
myself from any parental bonds. Though I never intended it to be that way,
my hectic work life and inner turbulences kept me from sharing my heart
with them. I hadn’t allowed them to share their concerns with me either. To
seek their advice and guidance is what parents expect from their kids. And it
only makes sense because they have accumulated valuable knowledge over
the years to pass on to their kids. I really did not know how to break the
news to them. But I had to do it if I was going to move in two days, so I
dialled my mom’s number immediately because she was a better option than
Dad.
‘Hello Mom,’ I said.
‘Hello beta.’ Her voice sounded like jingles to me. She surely lit up
on the other side of the phone.
‘Riya, what is this? I called you at least fifteen times yesterday but
you did not bother to take or return my calls. What is keeping you so busy
now that you have left your job? Do we raise kids so that they don’t even
take their parent’s phone call?’ she said.
‘Mom! We just talked two days ago and I told you guys that I am
safe, sound, healthy, eating and sleeping well. I cannot update you daily.’ I
tried to defend my unseemly behaviour.

Not picking up the phone is registered as highly offensive and an
immoral sin in that little protocol book of parenthood. It is a mandatory rule
for every child around the globe to take their parents’ calls even if they call
fifty times a day. No matter if the kids are conquering Mount Everest,
negotiating with ISIS heads or playing cricket in a stadium like they showed
in an ad with Sehwag—a call from mom cannot be missed.

And I had just missed it fifteen times! She even counted it! It was
already a bad start.

‘Accha choro isse! You tell me when are you coming back? We are
eagerly waiting for you to come and then we will organize a DJ party here
like Mrs Randhawa organized at our apartment base when her son returned
from US after one year. I have even taken that DJ wala’s number. The best
part is he plays the remixes of Kishore da and Rajesh Khanna hits so that we
elders can enjoy the lyrics and you youngsters can dance. I tell you he is
brilliant.’ She sounded so happy that my heart sank and guilt filled my
being.

Suddenly, I regretted my decision. Damn!
I gathered the courage and sprang it on her.
‘Mom! Actually! You see! I have got another job offer and I am
going to take it,’ I said nonchalantly.
‘What job? I don’t understand you one bit. You leave job, you pick
job. What are you up to? What job is this now?’ she demanded.
‘It’s…actually…it’s a government job. I will be an instructor at a
computer facility.’
God! How difficult was this going to be. Save me, please!
‘Instructor? What? Last time you were an engineer. Which company
is this?’ How wrong I was to think that I could dodge from the woman who
had me inside her womb for nine months!
Time to face the apocalypse!
‘Teacher, mom! I’m going to be a teacher! I will teach computers in a
kid’s school in Kashmir.’ I said it all at once.
There was at least two minutes’ silence on the phone and then there
was heavy breathing on the other side, and I suddenly heard my father’s
voice.
Damn!
‘Kashmir??’ His voice boomed.
What is this now? Do they talk to me on speaker phone? It had not
even been a second since I told my mom about it.
‘Dad, it is a golden opportunity for me. It will help me pursue a PhD
from a foreign university! It is very difficult to get admission into these
world-class foreign universities and all of them ask for some humanitarian

work on ground. So I decided to do it.’ I was squeaking but congratulated
my mind for this brilliant excuse.

‘Riya! You do whatever you feel like but you are our only child and
Kashmir is not the kind of place you should be, let alone work.’ Dad was
concerned.

‘Dad, don’t worry about my security. I have cross-checked with other
agencies and they all assured me that the working environment in the area is
safe. There are clashes, but they happen only between locals and security
personnel, and that too, very rarely.’ I hated myself as I said the words.

‘Do whatever you want to! When was the last time you listened to
us? It is all because your father could not control you. Aur bigado apni
laadli ko .’ It was my mom’s voice booming on the phone now. Definitely
speaker!

‘ Mai kar raha hu na baat? Chalo nahi aap hi kar lo.’ My dad now.
This telephonic ruckus went on for one good hour but eventually I
could convince them enough for them to hang up and I sank into the couch
really deep with a ‘Hmph’ sound. It better be a good decision or else I was
on the brink of stewing in regret soon, I thought.
‘Mr Durrani! I hope I can trust you,’ I mumbled. I messaged him to
book my tickets. I would join him at the airport.
That night, I slept fitfully, some unknown fear clogging my dreams.

10. Kashmir, the Paradise

I was truly smitten by the panoramic view of the snowy Himalayan
mountains and splendour of nature when I looked out from the window of
my business class seat, sipping a fruit juice. Mr Durrani was seated next to
me and was watching some old Hindi Dharmendra flick on his smartphone.
For him, I did not exist, and frankly, I liked it.

Our flight landed at Srinagar International Airport or Sheikh ul-Alam
Airport. It was very scenic. The airport terminal was designed to look like
the mighty Himalayas which was the very identity of Kashmir. The sloping
roof was winking in the pleasant sunshine, awaiting the seasonal snowfall to
slip off. There was a single asphalt runway and the airport was filled with
modern amenities.

It felt very welcoming.
We headed directly to Tral, which was around forty-two kilometers
away from Srinagar by road. It took us around an hour or so to get there.
That was the most scenic road drive I had ever been on. No words can
describe Kashmir’s natural beauty, scattered around at every nook and
corner. One might need to borrow the voices of the angels themselves to
describe what it’s like to be in Kashmir.
The snowcapped mountains, the pristine streams, the stunning
landscapes and the carpet of wildflowers across the valley seemed like a
serene painting. The dense forests and clean fresh air filled me with new
energy and an enthusiasm I had never felt before.
It was a good start. I smiled!
‘ If there is heaven on earth! It is here! It is here! ’ These lines of the
poet Firdausi floated into my mind.
When our vehicle screeched to a stop outside the huge iron gates of
the school, I could see a few kids come running towards us but stopping
midway. They were all staring at me intently and I felt nervous in spite of
shooting friendly smiles to everyone around. Some of them looked amused
and some giggled openly. After taking all the clues I could gather from the
current scenario I realized that it was my Selfie Queen printed UCB t-shirt
and distressed Calvin Klein jeans that were the culprits causing this undue
attention. All the while Mr Durrani looked unaware and unworried about my
existence as he completed my paperwork and talked to the officials.

Then a guy adorning a cream pathani suit and kufi skull cap
approached me and requested me to follow him, instantly taking the two
heavy suitcases that I had brought along with me. He ushered me towards
the quaint colonial cottages at the end of the enclosed premises.

We reached a cottage called Chenab and he dumped my suitcases
rather carelessly on the ground. Then he looked at me intently and it took me
a while to realise that he was anticipating a tip for his services. I checked my
pockets for some change and thankfully found a hundred-rupee note that I
immediately handed over to him. His face lit up and he left after thanking
me generously. Maybe it was the most generous tip that the fifteen-year-old
boy had ever received.

The evening sun was setting and I seriously hoped to rest in the
single bed in the room. The amenities were very basic: there was a table and
chair in one corner of the room. There was one more door exactly opposite
from the front door. I opened it and my eyes widened in awe. A balcony
opened out to a lawn strewn with cedar cones. The wind rustled through the
leaves and ruffled my hair. There was a boundary wall across the lawn
beyond which the gigantic, snowy peaks sparkled in the evening sun. The
trees laden with fruits and flowers swayed in the breeze. There were also two
plastic chairs and a table in one corner of the small balcony. My gaze strayed
to the serene mountains in the distance and I marvelled at their immutability.
I smiled; this was going to be my coffee space.

This is paradise; I can sit here forever, breathing this crisp mountain
air and listening to the trilling of these birds, I thought

Sudden thuds on the door broke my thoughts and I opened the door
quite annoyed. It was Mr Durrani.

‘Sorry to bother you, Riya, but I came here to bid you goodbye and
hand these documents over to you. Sign these and submit them to the main
office tomorrow,’ he said.

‘Goodbye? Are you not going to stay?’ I was perplexed.
Suddenly, I realized that I did not know anyone in these alien lands.
‘No! I work and stay in Srinagar. I just came here to settle you in. It
is a nice place and hopefully you should not have any problem. The people
here are a bit shy, and you might like to wear some decent clothes,’ he said.
‘What do you mean by decent clothes? Jeans and tees are among the
most decent clothes of the 21st century.’ I was offended.
If jeans are not decent then what would he think about my minis or
halters?
‘Please don’t mind. What I mean is I hope you have a salwar
kameez…if you don’t want to make people uncomfortable in your presence
or draw any kind of undue attention towards you. People in Kashmir are a
bit traditional and not used to seeing women in Western clothing. It is my

duty to tell you the right things. Though it is completely your wish what you
want to wear,’ he said in his usual robotic tone.

‘Okay! I get it, but can’t you leave in a day or two? Once I am a bit
settled here?’ I must be super desperate to be pleading for his company, I
thought.

It was only some time ago that I had promised myself that even if he
was the last person on this planet, I would prefer jumping off a cliff than
seek his company. It was unbelievable for my standards. But the waves of
loneliness and nostalgia were drowning me hard and fast. It felt like I was on
an island, and the one person I knew was leaving.

‘Don’t worry! Take this phone, and trust me, I am just a call away.
Either way, you are a big city girl, you will manage well. Also, I’m just an
hour’s journey from here,’ he said.

He instructed me about the basic safety protocols and saved some
important numbers, like that of the local police, ambulance etcetera, into the
new phone which was already loaded with a local pre-paid sim. Then, he bid
me goodbye.

Once he had left, I realized that Mr Durrani was a good man. Maybe
he did not speak much and was a bit weird when it came to social etiquette,
but he was one of those men whom you could trust. In fact, whatever little I
knew of him, I could make out that he was a very efficient and dependable
person. Looks are definitely deceptive. And yes, not all bureaucrats are bad;
some prefer to work in silence so that they can effectively help people in
need.

God bless Mr Durrani.
I hit the ugly bed in my room without bothering to fill my rumbling
tummy, and astonishingly, I slept well after a long time, away from
nightmares and mourning.
The next day, I was rudely awoken by a loud banging on the door. At
one point, I could hear someone saying loudly ‘Aapa, Aapa’ when I tried to
ignore the knocking and placed a pillow over my head. Finally, I opened the
door like an angry lioness. All red-eyed and fire in my heart! How dare he!
‘What?’ I growled.
‘Aapa, I am Rafeeq. I met you yesterday. Kept all your bags here and
you gave me a hundred rupees. I look after all the guests here. I’ve come to
serve you morning tea otherwise it’ll be over by the time you reach the mess.
And you also have to report to the main office by 8 a.m., so I thought I’d
wake you up,’ he squeaked.
I looked at the digital wall clock in the room. It was 7:30 a.m.
already. I stared in utter disbelief. I had slept for twelve hours straight! I
snatched the humble steel cup from Rafeeq’s hands, shut the door on his

face, and rushed to get ready. It did not seem like a good idea to be late on
the first day.

I was very curious about the main office building that Mr Durrani
had spoken about. But soon, I found out that the main office consisted of
three little rooms set a little away from the kids’ hostel and classrooms. The
whole setup was in complete contrast to what I was used to—sky high state-
of-the-art buildings and humongous edifices. But the tranquility in the air
and warm salutations around were so heartening, that it was more than
anything I could have asked for.

I met a rather gloomy looking man in a pathani suit with a kufi cap.
He was Dr Ahmed Khan, and he immediately snatched my documents from
my hands and screened them carefully for a good fifteen minutes. Then he
pressed an ancient looking call bell on the table and shouted, ‘Miss Susan!’

Astonished, I turned around to find a foreigner at the door. She was a
short, stout, beautiful, auburn-haired white lady with soft blue eyes. She
glanced at me and I smiled in return.

‘Miss Susan, please show Miss Riya the classrooms and brief her
about the rules here,’ Mr Khan said in an authoritative tone. I jumped like a
rabbit in excitement and joined Miss Susan merrily. We moved out of the
room.

‘Hey! Susan Stewart! Nice to meet you,’ she said pleasantly.
‘Riya Khanna! Nice to meet you too.’ We shook hands like long-lost
friends.
‘So good to see you, Reeeyyaa! You are officially the second woman
here, after me. The team consists of five more people, but they are all
Kashmiri men. Quite conservative in their approach when it comes to
interacting with women. Although they are nice people,’ she said.
‘Okay!’ I smiled.
‘This will be your workplace, and from now onwards you will be the
official in charge of this computer lab.’ She handed me two huge antique
keys.
‘And what do I do here?’ I asked.
‘Nothing! You just have to teach the kids visiting this computer lab.
Mostly, the other teachers bring them here when they want a break. They
think a computer class is leisure. But now that we have you here, we can
expect some action. Also never forget to lock it properly before you leave.
There are five of us in total, who play teachers, lab attendants, clerks, and
every other role to run this little place. We handle each other’s classes too,
when someone is on leave or something,’ she said chirpily.
‘What else do you do here apart from looking after the kids? I mean,
what do other teachers do to pass the time or hang out?’ I said.

‘Hang out? Ha ha! Wake up, Reeyaa! You are in a small village, that
too in Kashmir. Where are you staying, by the way?’ she enquired.

‘In a cottage called Chenab on the premises,’ I replied.
‘Oh, that is right next to mine. I will catch up with you in the evening
to tell you how to survive this place and other details. Right now, I should
move my arse, or else Mr Khan could appear like a genie and we’ll be in
trouble. You can never predict what this guy will do,’ she smiled.
After she had left, I sat down on one of the chairs, wondering what I
had gotten myself into and what for.
Was it some kind of sign that I was losing my mental balance or that
I was still living in denial and seeking him? Did he even exist or I should
detach myself from these memories that now seemed like a distant dream, a
faded moment in eternity? Why could I not move on or had I moved on too
far? What consequences were awaiting me now that I had abandoned
everything that defined my identity once?
I still didn’t have answers to any of the questions I had been asking
the universe ever since the Taj burnt and engulfed my existence in its flames.
How would I ever know if he hadn’t lied, and that everything was just
spontaneous and that there was no reason I should believe in true love? But
then, why could I not be my normal self or at least something close to it?
Questions, questions and only questions with no answers to look
forward to. Just my torn soul and scarred memory.
‘No! No! Why am I thinking about him? I am here in nature’s
paradise. It was he who turned Mumbai into a haunted place for me and now
he cannot encroach the peace of my life here as well. I need to shut it out. I
don’t know him and I cannot let him do that again to me .’ I shook my head
desperately.
Just then, a few students entered the room, pulling me out of my
mental ruckus. And I appreciated it.
I got up at once and they did not even glance at me. It was not the
kind of friendly teacher and student relationship I had been anticipating. We
needed to introduce ourselves. Common, Riya, gear up! You have handled
high-end business meetings and corporate conferences. These are just kids, I
told myself.
‘Hello, children…err…students! I am your new computer teacher
and I want all of you to introduce yourselves one by one,’ I said
energetically.
There was no movement from the kids! Nothing!
But I could see a few girls who had their heads covered in hijabs
giggling in one corner. This was not acceptable. There were around fifteen
students and they were standing here and there forming little groups and
staring at me.

‘Okay, students! Pull out those benches over there and sit down!’ I
tried to infuse more power and authority into my tone, and this time, some of
the kids complied, reluctantly pulling out benches and dragging them to my
chair.

‘So hello! Again! I am Miss Riya Khanna and I will be your
computer teacher. I’ve come from Mumbai and I want to know more about
you. We will start with the last boy sitting over there. Please stand up and
introduce yourself.’

He stood up shyly and said, ‘Asalam Walekum, Madam ji! I am
Jawed and I live here.’ Then he sat down quickly.

‘Asalam Walekum! I am Farhana and I live here.’ She sat down too.
This pattern went on till the fifteenth child. All they did was mention
their names and sit down. So unlike the kids you see in metros or other cities
who are chirpy, curious and chatterboxes! Full of energy forcing you to
scratch your heads through their volley of questions. These kids were quiet,
shy and extremely innocent. I could see their pretty little faces emanating
some kind of effervescence. The blue, brown and black eyes were not
wandering here and there but mostly gazing at the floor or staring into the
distance. There was so much tranquility around those ten or twelve-year-old
kids.
They were all orphans and it felt as if they had embraced their
sufferings with remarkable stoicism, and here I was, not being able to cope
with my broken heart.
Pat their backs instantly and hug them tighter, Riya !
I did not push them any further and let them go once the class was
over. Then, there came several other batches of students of different age
groups who were all quiet, obedient and shy, talking softly and gazing at me
nervously.
All the boys were dressed in pathani suits in neutral colours along
with kufi caps. The girls were all fully covered in salwar suits with a hijab
over their heads. I was the odd one out in my sleeveless suit; I pulled at my
dupatta to cover my shoulders and hide my bare arms.
I needed some proper clothes…desperately.
Finally, by 3 p.m. I returned to my cottage, exhausted. That sad little
cottage felt astonishingly welcoming. I had my lunch at the mess and I just
sprawled on my bed for an hour or so until some serious knocks on the door
disturbed my afternoon nap.
It was Susan at the door.
‘Hey there! Sleeping already?’ She did not even wait for me to invite
her inside and walked right into my room.
‘Hey, Susan! Good evening to you too,’ I replied.

‘Ha ha! I just dropped by to show you the world’s most scenic view
from your balcony.’ And she opened the rear door.

The red sun was sinking between the azure mountains. The vibrant
shades of red and orange were spreading across the sky. The birds were
returning to their nests. The long chinar, cedar and willow trees were
swaying. It felt as if the whole earth was encircled by the far-off mountain
crescent surrounded by departing clouds and varied shades of colours: blue,
green, red, orange and purple. The mellowness of the light was
overwhelming.

Soaking in the panorama of the landscape stretching before me, I
realized that coming here was the best decision of my life.

I could not take my eyes off the view for a while. Then, we sat down
on the plastic chairs in the balcony and Susan poured us some hot tea from a
thermos flask that she had brought along with her.

‘So what is your story, Susan? Frankly, it seems unreal to see you
here.’ I broke the silence between us.

‘Why? I have survived the last year here and it is quite a nice place.
Except for the clashes and curfews that keep on happening and sometimes
there are terrorist shoot-outs at local houses! Otherwise, everything else is
quite lovely. So much peace and tranquility among these woods, you don’t
find that easily elsewhere. I like this whole concept of hiding oneself amid
these beautiful mountains,’ she said smilingly.

‘So you like the place. But how did you end up here and what do you
mean hiding oneself?’ I asked.

My Indian genes could not help nagging her. For us courtesy means
never leaving people alone and extracting all their private and personal
information. Namaste!

‘Well! I was a journalist in the UK. Actually a very hotshot journalist
back there at my place. I worked with the Daily Mirror and was sent on an
assignment for a few months to do on-ground reporting from Kashmir. I met
a really nice French journalist here and we made out quite a lot, which was
very therapeutic in such a place, but then he was kidnapped by local
terrorists all because of me.’ She paused for a second, as if drawing all her
courage out.

She continued, ‘Once, I had insisted that he ditch the security we
were provided by the Indian government and contact our local informer
directly, which turned out to be a bad idea. The informer double-crossed us
and handed us over to the terrorists. They decided to spare me because firstly
they did not want to carry a female along with their all-male group—they
thought I would corrupt their religious beliefs—and secondly, they wanted
me to carry their message to the whole world. It created a buzz back then
with no specific action taken. They beheaded him in a video which they later

posted on their website. Though the terrorists were also killed by 51
Rashtriya Rifles troops two months after the incident.’

She took a deep breath, paused and continued again.
‘I was contacted by Indian Intelligence agencies, MI-6 and even by
the CIA. Everyone wanted information but nobody was concerned about the
healing I needed at that time or how badly I needed a shoulder to cry on.
Basically there was lot of blood spilled while people kept nagging me for
their benefit. It moved something inside me and I became cynical, but
astonishingly Kashmir’s innocence provided me the solace I was looking for.
I decided to stay back here, away from the urban jungles. I don’t know what
but something about Kashmir clung to me badly and I could not just run
away leaving this paradise on earth,’ she said.
‘Then I needed a place to stay and some sense of security and one
local journalist friend set me up here. Since then I have been teaching
students and when I need a break, I take leave for a few days and travel solo
to other Indian cities, but there is no other place like Kashmir. So in spite of
getting seriously depressed here, I keep coming back. Let’s see how long I
manage to stick to this place.’ She smiled.
I was stunned. And all I had ever thought of were my own miseries.
This woman before me was the epitome of courage and strength. She
did not run away, but rather, had decided to stay and fight. She laughed and
travelled too. I felt stupid before her. A little embarrassment swept over me
which I concealed successfully.
‘I am in serious need of some suitable clothes. Where can I get that?’
It was all I could utter, a little scared that she would ask me my story.
‘We have flea markets twice a week and there is a nice old lady who
stitches suits. In fact, she made me all these loose-fitting saaalwar kameeeez
but these are exactly what we need here. Whenever I go outside in these,
locals don’t actually stare that much,’ she replied.
‘Can we go to her and ask for more salwar suits for me too?’
‘Sure. But we must leave now. She is just five minutes away but will
close soon,’ she said.
I put my sneakers on and wrapped a stole around my neck over a full
sleeved t-shirt and cargo pants and Susan took out her scooty to head
towards the local market.
The tiny village, nestled in the slope of the mountain, had a few
scenic roads that all led to the village centre. There was a small bus stand
surrounded by the bazaar which had a clutch of shops that stocked essentials
for a simple life. There were roadside hawkers and peddlers selling odds and
ends, from groceries to clothes to cereals. For fancier things, one had to
travel to Srinagar through zigzagging roads. The thick clump of trees
surrounded most of Tral’s tiny little buildings and shops but the beautiful

sights of rolling slopes and the snow-clad peaks of the Himalayas were
breathtaking.

Once we reached the market, everybody started calling out to us to
visit their stalls. A shopkeeper who was selling cashew, walnut, kahwa, hing
and kesar, which he kept under the open sky over a plastic sheet, rushed
toward us to invite us to his stall. It felt so much like the rest of India in the
sheer similarity of its market etiquettes by local vendors.

I smiled.
He tried to sell us the famous Kashmiri kesar which smelled exotic
and was super expensive even after a huge discount, but we had no use for it
so we did not buy any. The man looked kind of upset and so to appease him,
I bought a packet of kahwa that I thought could easily be prepared using my
electric kettle back at the room.
We finally reached the tailor who lived in a brightly painted
traditional Kashmiri house with wooden doors and crooked windows. The
thatched roof was low, so much so that I could literally touch the ceiling if I
raised my hand. But that humble abode was pretty—the wall hangings had
beautiful Kashmiri aari work—as were the wooden crafted things and
papier-mâché bowls. It was amazing that someone had taken such great
effort to decorate that small space.
‘Arrey, Susan beta! As-salamu alaykum, so good to see you.’ The old
woman suddenly appeared like a genie.
‘Good evening, Aunty. So good to see you too.’ They hugged like
two long lost friends.
‘Aunty! See who have I brought along with me? It’s Reeyaa and
you’ve got to stich her salwar suits too,’ she demanded.
‘Jarur! Jarur beta ji! But why just salwar kameez? Why not a pheran?
After all you are in Kashmir. You cannot experience Kashmiriyat if you
don’t wear this beautiful traditional dress. Wait, let me show you first. I
made one for Susan beta too,’ she said.
She brought out a long loose jamawar pheran and forced me to try it
out right over my jeans. It was fun actually. The traditional head dress,
which is called ‘kasaba’ in the local language, was pinned with the help of
brooches. Some chunky silver jewellery was added too and we clicked some
lovely selfies with my phone.
Aunty had the perfect poses and pouts every single time and by the
end of it, over cups of kahwa topped with Kashmiri almond flakes and
strands of kesar, I ordered several different salwar kameezes. By the time we
were done it was almost dark. We hugged her and returned to our cottages.
We had our dinner at the mess and by the time I hit my bed, it was past
midnight. Susan was great company and after a long time I felt at peace.

That void, that loneliness I constantly felt was blurred and the sheen
and spark of our day made me smile as I closed my eyes for the day.

11. Pain Gives You Purpose

I got up on time the next day and opened the door politely for Rafeeq, for a
change. In fact, I offered him a broad warm smile when he came in with his
little kettle. It was going to be a beautiful day ahead. I could sense it.

The classroom buzzed with the infectious energy of young souls and
their endless questions kept me hooked. They looked more relaxed than
yesterday. I booted up the computers and asked them to start with Microsoft
paint. I showed them the various tools and how to use them. They were
astonished to know that their computers could actually paint for them. Till
now, they had used them only to watch animated movies or songs.

Computer classes for them were like a library period where they did
not do any work. But now, exploring the possibilities, they had a great time
drawing lines, using the paint brush and then erasing the imperfections.

The boundaries between us were dissolving. I opened the windows
which brought in a cold chilly breeze instantly.

The freshness reached my soul and the beauty that was laid around
everywhere in nature comforted my spirits. The long-lost zeal and ardour
was back in me and I forgot everything that had happened in the past. This
was a new me.

The chirpy souls would not stop talking or asking questions. The
quiet angels turned out to be little monkeys full of curiosity about the world
outside Kashmir. Their small eyes were filled with endless dreams. Some
wanted to be engineers, some doctors, and some even wanted to join the
army. I was astonished by the fervour and enthusiasm those little Kashmiri
kids possessed.

It was like any other place in India. Sometimes the media reports of
violence and terrorism across the valley would confuse me because it had
been two months there and I never faced even a teasing. The bizarre media
world startled me with the pieces of news that would hint about the plague of
terrorism that had engulfed the valley since long.

I would often think about the giggling kids, orphaned but with a
spirit that was unbroken. Some of them were aware of their state and some
denied it, while others were in fact too small to even acknowledge the fact.
There were some who had never known what it feels like to have a parent,
but they had found companionship among each other and the endless

activities that the school offered them. They idolized us teachers and
followed our instructions earnestly. That is the beauty of young minds, they
accept what comes their way. It is up to the older generation to offer them a
world they truly deserve, away from hatred, politics and war.

For them we were the angels sent by Allah, for us it was them!
Life had never been this fulfilling and enriching. Each interaction
with those kids would bring me closer to life. I started calling my parents
every day because I realized how fortunate I was to have them. Sometimes,
my heart would fill with sadness—I would wonder ‘Why them?’ But it was
healing to be around the kids. Participating in their daily lives and solving
their cute little problems that did not matter to anybody else was therapeutic.
Sometimes the dean, Mr Khan, would organize a trek or a picnic and
that day would be a happy day for all of us. We would all stuff ourselves into
a compact van, look out of the glass windows happily and await our
destination. The picnic spot would mostly be at a bucolic setting in the
valley. Campfires would be lit and the surrounding would be engulfed by
some of the most exotic aromas of chicken and rice. The swaying trees and
the gurgling rivers would seem very welcoming. The magnificent wilderness
in its virgin beauty would mesmerize the senses. The overjoyed children, in
their new-found freedom, would not leave a single stone unturned in the
area. The barriers of civilization ceased to exist in those moments.
There was a time when I would be overjoyed to shop—embellished
capes, Calvin Klein ripped jeans or Michael Kors leather tote bags. The
swirling sticks of Bobbi Brown lipsticks or the smell of Chanel perfumes
would lift me up. Happiness, back then, lived at the cozy corner of Starbucks
or at a high end restaurant in Bandra.
How naïve I was! I never actually knew true happiness. There, in
those shabby pherans, I found sterling joy radiating everywhere, while
slurping chicken stew or doing absolutely nothing!
Happiness is when you realize that it is within you and not outside.
Then we would return to our humble accommodation. The exhausted
kids would snooze in the van, only to be hustled back into their hostel rooms
later.
Life was blissful during those days.
I could feel peace all around me in its most unadulterated form. The
sunrays radiating across the mountains would fill my room with warmth on
cozy Sundays when I snuggled into my pillow some more. Adrakwali chai
had totally replaced the dark espresso in my life and kahwa replaced cold-
drinks.
Life is really simple. We make it complicated with our desires and
loathing. Nothing is ever enough for us and we keep wandering into the
jungles of wanting more and instigating the karmic cycle.

Virat would still haunt me in my dreams sometimes. I could feel his
warm breath and blazing eyes staring at me intently. He would hold me
softly and then suddenly his machine gun would start firing, shredding me to
bits and pieces, eliminating my whole existence in a second. I would get up,
sweating and breathing heavily.

How is this even possible, for a person to grip your memories, pierce
your soul and leave you haunted forever?

Time flew in a whoosh just like the wind and mist that disappear in
the grass. It was almost six months since I had come and I was quite
comfortable with the ‘new me’. Mr Durrani called me a few times to ask
about my well-being but never visited. He was a good man and I owed some
gratitude to him for providing purpose to my lost life again.

The same purpose which had been left there in the burning corridors
of the Taj!

Kashmir was burning those days over the killing of a terrorist. The
Indian Army was behind hunting him down, in what was considered a
revenge mission, since a young Kashmiri Army officer from the valley was
abducted and murdered brutally during his vacation to his own little village.
He was found in his father’s apple orchards, where he grew up playing and
praying to be an officer in the Indian Army. It was not a job but a quest to
lead a good life and serve the nation he believed in.

He was just twenty-three.
Can the dreams of a young boy hurt somebody so much so that they
plan to kill him brutally? They killed him and threw his body in the orchards
which was eventually found after a search and rescue operation by the
soldiers of his own paltan who swore on his blood to avenge his death. There
was so much agony and grief among the locals once his dead body was back
home for last rites.
A mother died and a sister lost her heart forever. A family destroyed
in the quest of bringing to life their collective dream.
There had been smiles and hope and now there was nothing left
except oblivion.
His body was wrapped carefully in a Kashmiri quilt famous for its
warmth. After all, it was cold that day. So what if his teeth and nose were
broken, and eyes punctured—the family members ensured that his body had
the warmth of the warmest quilt in the region before he got wrapped in the
tri colour and was buried deep in the soil he believed in, to be a legend
forever.
He made the supreme sacrifice and was given the supreme honour by
the state too. A wreath-laying ceremony was held on open grounds where a
huge crowd gathered to pay the last homage to the son of the soil. His
Commanding Officer, brothers-in-arms, his paltan and his buddies carried

his coffin. The eyes of the Rashtriya Rifles soldiers were bloodshot and the
eerie quiet around was indication of an upcoming storm.

The guards performed ‘Shok Shastra’ and even the sky cried that day.
Such young souls never die. They are martyrs and are registered
carefully in the pages of history to be presented as symbols of hopes for
generations to come. The death was mourned deeply among the locals. It
was taken as the death of one more Kashmiri dream. The same dream which
lingers in the hearts of thousands of Kashmiri youth.
There are two sides of Kashmir. One side has a rich tradition of
joining the Indian Armed forces; there are many battalions like the Jammu
and Kashmir Light Infantry and Jammu and Kashmir Rifles, which comprise
Jammu and Kashmiri youth, ready to protect the borders always. The young
Kashmiri men and women join the armed forces and police to adorn
uniforms as righteously as any other Indian to serve the mother nation.
These people believe in the dream seen by their forefathers, called sovereign
India. They know the pride and privilege that it takes to be an Indian citizen.
The other side believes in the ideology of Azad Kashmir. They don’t
believe in any government and despise people believing in Indian
sovereignty. They might be right about their ideology but killing their own
people for their beliefs? How is that justified when you claim to fight for
your beliefs?
They waste their people over false claims and promises by
governments, countries, separatists and leaders who themselves never chose
the same path for their own families. Kashmir sheds tears every day over the
tragedy of losing the locals, the forces, the young, the old and the loved
ones. This heaven on earth has not been able to cherish its beauty and dwell
in its full glory for a long time. This bride has lived the life of a widow since
long. Only because of some people’s greed it has lost its sons, daughters and
well-wishers.
This kind of planned propaganda deters people from claiming their
righteous dominance. It is a vicious circle of karma which never ends.
Deaths are mourned, emotions are replaced by rage. Revenge replaces the
aspirations. Young lives are turned towards violence. The dreams are no
more about green pastures and fairy lands but about fire and death. Who
wins? Who loses? Who is right? Who is wrong? Who gains what? They
make a list of trivial questions and what matters eventually is that families
are destroyed and no single side is spared from the hatred and loss.
I sighed.
My heart had grown to love the place over time. Kashmir was truly
mesmerizing, if you looked at only one side and chose to ignore the other
side which is dark, brutal and shocking. The classes were suspended and
gates were closed all the time during the riots. All of us were instructed not

to step out of the shelter home and we did not. TV and cable connection was
still there, with very limited channels, and radio proved to be a better
companion in those times of seclusion.

We could make out that severe clashes of forces and locals were
going on. People were pelting stones on forces and forces were retaliating
with pellet guns. That was heartbreaking. Forces were equipped with
weapons of mass destruction and they were free to use them. It was not wise
to engage with them unarmed.

We heard that many tourists got trapped in Kashmir and took shelter
here and there after the conflicts erupted suddenly. Then the imposed curfew
ended all their hopes of returning from this heaven on earth soon. Tourism is
the main occupation of Kashmir and generates huge revenues for the
government and helps locals to earn their bread and butter comfortably. But
these regular curfews and conflicts in Kashmir broke another dream of the
average Kashmiri family of food in the belly and dignified living.

Maybe that is what the plan is! Of the so-called separatist leaders or
enemy country. After all who bothers what happens to the common people.

It’s government vs government, agenda vs agenda and country vs
country where people play mere pawns!

The groceries were diminishing quickly and kids were getting
cranky. There was no movement around. The air was chilly and dull. The
timings of the curfews were eased after some time. The common people,
mostly male members of families, would rush to the local markets in fear of
not getting the daily groceries. The street markets would set up within
minutes but the prices were touching the sky.

Fear instigates a profit-making attitude in many people. But the
protests had gutted hundreds of shops and properties worth crores were
destroyed. The administration would keep documenting the heavy losses,
sending files to Srinagar and also maintaining law and order in the area.
Normalcy was limping back gradually, and we could feel that the
administration might lift the curfew fully anytime soon. This happened too.

Curfew was lifted…after three months!
The separatists, terrorists, government and forces all got back to their
routine drills, leaving Kashmiris all alone to start from scratch again. This is
life. It moves on even in the most demanding times. We are still humans
carrying that powerful moving force in our hearts, known as hope!
Kashmir would never perish. It would survive. I knew that.
Daily life in Kashmir returned slowly but surely. The nooks and
corners were filled with the warmth of people bonding over cups of kahwa
again. The markets were smelling of kesar and cherries. The vendors were
buzzing and shouting to passersby. There was a lot of negative news around
in the aftermath of the riots and long curfew. But Kashmir was used to that.

It moved on. The classes started with full force with the extra pressure of
completing the syllabus within the crunched time.

Winter was approaching a little sooner, I felt. The temperature was
dipping every day, the breeze was freezing and shades of grey were
dominating. Though it was getting colder, all this added to the mystery of
Kashmir some more by enhancing its charm to the naked eye. Snowfall had
not started yet and everything was still functional in Kashmir.

I was told by the locals that once the period of ‘Chilai Kalan’ started,
it would go on through December and January and get really bad. For an
outsider who loves winters, it was interesting to witness the forty days of
Chilai Kalan. But the locals hated that forty-day period of Chilai Kalan as
supply stops, movements of vehicles from outside is halted because of the
harsh weather conditions. Everyone stays indoors, under heavy blankets. The
locals call it the ugliest season, and many Kashmiris move to Jammu during
this time of the year where they live in rented spaces and rooms and enjoy
the hospitality that the city of temples, Jammu, has to offer.

The malls, the zoo, the markets and the urban life in Jammu would
grip the Kashmiri imagination for a while and they would enjoy it, roaming
enthusiastically with their families in their rather distinguished pherans
around Jammu streets. Jammu would buzz with a lot more activity than the
usual.

That is how Jammu and Kashmir bonds together as one state, as one
people.

I was confused about Chilai Kalan, about whether I needed to move
out or stay. The school would be closed during this time and the winter was
going to be bone chilling. But it was only mid-October now so I didn’t think
too much about it. For me, Kashmir was my liberation from the world and I
had not thought about leaving it yet.

I loved my kids as well. They were turning out to be smarter than I
had thought.

One day little Farjana asked me, ‘Madam ji, what is Mumbai like?’
I got all excited. ‘Well! It is huge you see. Double decker buses, fast
life, lots of tall buildings, and what not is there. It is surrounded by a sea.
How many of you have seen a sea?’
Not a single hand was raised in the classroom. So I asked, ‘Okay!
And how many of you know what the sea is? You, Aftab, tell me.’
He said with as much excitement as a seven-year-old can manage,
‘Sea is a huge water body. Just like our waterfalls but they are not waterfalls.
There are huge waves in the sea which come to the shore with a lot of noise
and go back quickly.’
I smiled and said, ‘Wonderful, Aftab. Now we should all clap for him
for this correct description of the sea.’

He blushed and rolled his eyes with pride. It warmed my heart and I
said, ‘You know about Marine Drive?’

The class said ‘Noooo’ in unison.
‘It is the most beloved place in Mumbai. It is a long boulevard in
South Mumbai and flanked by huge buildings on one side and huge porous
rocks known as Tetrapods on the other side. Waves strike these rocks with
full force and retreat soon after. People from all around the world,
Mumbaikars and tourists, sit around there. You know, it looks magnificent in
the night with all those flickering lights and it is also known as the Queen’s
Necklace.’ I described it with childlike enthusiasm.
The kids looked mesmerized and then little Fatima asked, ‘Then why
did you leave it?’
The question hit me with an intensity I was not anticipating. I was at
a loss for words.
I replied rather dimly, ‘Err…Umm…because…you see I love
Kashmir more!’
I finished up class soon after and took the rest of the day off. The day
was a blur in my mind, and a combination of strange, fuzzy dreams about
blood, gunshots, fire and Virat kept me tossing and turning throughout the
night.
The pain of losing him just like that was excruciating.
He left me only to perish into bits and pieces every day. It would
have been a glorious death by those firing bullets in the Taj, better than
dying and quitting every day. For him, maybe I was just another victim like
those he keeps meeting during his missions. Maybe it is just his routine and I
meant nothing to him. He risked his life every day. It was not extraordinary
that he saved me during those dark hours. Didn’t I have a right to lose my
heart to my saviour? Just like in all those Bollywood movies! He never
showed up nor had he bothered to explain. I did not deserve that or maybe I
deserved that, as losing your heart to an unknown warrior comes with
consequences. It was my fault and my punishment was to suffer throughout
my life.
But he said… ‘I will find you’.
I closed my eyes quickly.

12. The Prime Minister’s Visit

Loving someone with all your heart and losing them can have apocalyptic
effects on one’s soul which can never be fixed by anyone else but by the
ones whom you have lost. You are never the same person again. The soul
dies a bit or maybe goes away with the lost love. You see the world a little
differently and you end up finding mostly dark grey shades in your once
colourful life. It hurts when someone you love remains in your heart and you
cannot take them into your arms. You cry, you sob, you shatter things, but
nothing can bring them back. Perhaps, they were never meant to be yours.

They were there for a silly moment to teach you the lessons of love,
life and pain all at once. It felt like even the Bermuda Triangle could not
hide me away from my miseries, memories and pain, and Kashmir was not
even that alien. Where could I have run away from my inner turmoil?

I sobbed into my pillow till daybreak, and the next day, I woke up
with a fog of fever. I was burning like I had been in a sauna for hours.

Susan visited me and brought some paracetamol and antibiotics with
her. Rafeeq had told her about my condition and she duly informed Mr
Ahmed Khan about my fever. He asked Susan to tell me to rest till I
recovered, and not bother about classes. I felt so relieved. Susan was turning
out to be one very special person in my life. She was nothing like me; we
both belonged to different creeds, nations and ethnicities. But our common
situation and loneliness bonded us in those snowy lands which were alien yet
beloved to both of us.

I smiled.
She asked, ‘What is so wrong with you? What happened to your
immunity? You looked fine just yesterday.’
I replied, casually suppressing my agony, ‘Nothing! Maybe just a
viral due to the weather change! You tell me what happened today?’
‘Nothing much! But yes, the kids were asking about you and they
played solitaire in your absence. I’d say you’re creating some genius
solitaire players here.’ She giggled.
‘Ha ha! Actually my idea of education is synonymous with having
fun. I mean, what would you learn if you didn’t enjoy it,’ I explained.
‘I know that, and the kids love you,’ she said.

‘I know! You see…I am very passionate about this job. I love
teaching these kids. I never felt like this before in my previous job,’ I said.

‘By the way, there is some big news too,’ she said.
‘What?’ I asked
‘The prime minister is visiting us next week. It was being kept under
wraps due to security reasons, but the preparations have been going on for a
while. He wants to connect with the locals here and spread his message of
love and peace to them directly. He wants to project a secular image to the
Kashmiri people and shed the outsider image, especially after so many
Kashmiris voted for him in the previous election. He is also coming to our
school to meet the kids.’ She was almost whispering.
‘That is great. Who told you all this?’ I asked casually as if prime
ministers visited rural Kashmir all the time.
‘Mr Khan himself! He got the call from the state home minister
directly from Srinagar and had been asked to keep it under wraps and not
inform the media. They anticipate the media directly on the day of the visit
or they might even bring their own media personnel with them.’
She left after a while and I also resigned for the day by slumping
against the pillows on my bed.
I was feeling much better the next day.
As I stepped out of my room to join the classes I saw a convoy of
military trucks on the dirt track connecting our shelter home to the village. I
walked towards the willow and poplars near the aluminum fence of the
school to get a clearer view and I saw moving military vehicles, armed
soldiers, armoured cars with machine guns mounted on it and even army
battle tanks.
My mouth fell open.
I mean, military convoys? Armed soldiers were not an alien sight in
Kashmir but the intensity of the view I had was different. By now the entire
school, hearing the loud rumbling noises of battle tanks and extraordinary
military movements, had turned up on the common grounds. The trucks in
the first row of the convoy screeched to a halt at the gates and with them the
entire convoy halted systematically. The soldiers were moving in and one of
their officers asked for the ‘in charge’.
After some sharp murmurs, Mr Khan moved from his place and
stood before him claiming his authority. The officer said something to him in
an inaudible tone unlike their loud and commanding voice and I could see
Mr Khan nodding nervously. After a few minutes, the officer went back to
his convoy and started giving instructions to his chaps.
Mr Khan wiped his profusely sweating forehead with a handkerchief
and instructed us to take the kids back to the classes. We herded the students
together and took them to the classrooms. The soldiers set to work fast. In a

few hours, the trucks had been unloaded and soon the shelter was turned into
a military camp. Over the next few days, they built watchtowers and sandbag
bunkers along the school fence. Scores of machine gun nozzles and stern-
looking soldiers stared from the rectangular firing slats of the bunkers,
draped with wire mesh aimed at deflecting potential grenades.

We were given new rules to follow which especially emphasized that
half the school building was off limits at all times. We were also instructed
to carry our identity cards with us all the time and show it to the soldiers
every time we entered or left the school. The soldiers never bothered us, and
we went on with our daily schedules.

The soldiers set about their task of ‘area domination’—patrolling the
road passing by the school now and then. Strangely, none of it filled me with
a sense of security. Being a north Indian, the word ‘army’ had always
instilled confidence in me, but here, in this small village of Kashmir, it was
collapsing with my insecurity or fear maybe.

The Indian Army is a very dreaded and hated term in Kashmir.
Unlike tourists or other people from the rest of the country, who are mostly
welcome here, the army is always considered the enemy. The setting up of a
military camp in our shelter home also made us prone to guerrilla attacks.
We, uneasily, expected the inevitable. It was strange to be in the shoes of a
Kashmiri. The militants and the army both are considered a threat in
Kashmir.

Who loses after all? A common Kashmiri!
During my stay, I had learnt some hard facts too. Kids as young as
ten years old were sent to Pakistan-occupied Kashmir for arms and
ammunition trainings. Some were forced to join the ongoing war by their
friends or relatives, and some would just be inspired to join by themselves.
Such kids would leave their families and flee their houses to join banned
organizations like JKLF (Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front) or Hizbul
Mujahideen or many other terrorist organizations. These various
organizations were ideological rivals. JKLF fought for an independent
Kashmir whereas the HM supported the merger of Kashmir with Pakistan.
Many of the Kashmiris trained locally in orchards or meadows and
were prone to regular army raids. But those who managed to cross the LOC
without getting shot at by BSF or Indian Army and could also come back
without getting killed were considered heroes. The families loathed every
single minute of it, but they were treated with great respect if their sons
returned safely to fight against the Indian Army. It also helped the young
terrorists attract female adulation, but the end result led to only one fate—
mourning of the death of their wards by family members. The consequences
of fighting against an organized and highly equipped army were inevitable
and they were to be eliminated sooner or later.

Here, the role of separatists or terrorist heads was pivotal as they
were the ones who provoked generations of youth to join the so called
‘jihad’ while their own sons and daughters were studying abroad and
becoming doctors and engineers. The Indian government also had limited
options here. These separatist leaders sponsored by the enemy country spoke
openly against the country they lived in but the Indian government chose to
ignore them. Any strict actions against these popular leaders meant protest
by the masses and also raking up of the Kashmir issue among international
communities.

The government would just imprison them occasionally.
This is politics. This is the world. It demands blood and flesh. The
struggle between masses and the government is always of apocalyptic
proportions. Who benefited? Those leaders who turn out to be gold diggers
or those governments who turn out to be tyrannical? What of the common
man who is affected the most by the clashes and also by the negotiations?
The day of the prime minister’s arrival was close.
However, no official statement had been issued yet. Mr Khan looked
perplexed. There was grave danger looming over his head because of the
military but being a government employee, he had no option.
Watching those men in uniform would also make my stomach churn
sometimes. Though their camouflage combat uniforms were nothing like
Virat’s black overall, the presence of the army reminded me of him again
and again.
The happiness that I had gathered recently, the smiles that I would
flaunt and the momentary truce with the past were gone suddenly and the
nightmares of blood, death and Virat were back in my life. The angelic faces
of the kids was calming but I was distracted and could not put in hundred
percent of my energies for those kids. I felt guilty most of the time.
Finally, the day of the prime minister’s visit arrived. It was a three-
day visit to Kashmir. His itinerary included various important places. He had
a very charismatic personality and the media just loved clicking him. The
newspapers, TV channels and social media were all buzzing with ‘what he
ate’, ‘where he visited’, ‘whom he met’ and many things more.
His candid pictures hugging Kashmiri locals, offering chadar at
Hazratbal, sharing sweets with troops or a shikara ride on Dal Lake in
Srinagar were going viral. The TV channels promptly set up debate panels
over the long-term result of his unexpected visit.
He gave speeches about peace and prosperity.
He looked convincing when he said the dark phases were over and
now the youth of Kashmir deserved equal opportunities like any citizen of
India. He promised more colleges and hospitals. Thousands of people turned
up to his public events. It all looked very appealing. But there was

something odd about everything. The unusual silence in the valley! There
were the usual rants by separatist leaders who appealed to the people not to
attend his events, but there was no major terrorist activity or bomb blasts
reported anywhere in Kashmir.

Kashmir looked deceptively peaceful and welcoming.
Tral was scheduled to be visited on the last day of his official tour
and by then we were all eagerly looking forward to meeting him. The
general worry was replaced by excitement. The entire school was decorated.
The Indian flag was installed in the school premises and the prime minister
was supposed to hoist it. The young kids looked bewildered and for them it
was like a long-awaited carnival which they rarely witnessed. Many of them
were seeing the Tiranga for the first time and were very happy.
The soldiers felt familiar by now. Many kids even befriended some
of them and would proudly flaunt the little goodies, chips or biscuits offered
to them by the security forces. One multi-layered security blanket was
thrown around the day the prime minister arrived at Tral, which was also
declared a no-fly zone for that day and a drone kept an aerial tab on the
security. The streets were blocked and identity cards were checked at every
step. More than a hundred CCTV cameras were installed across the village
and we could see many unfamiliar, non-Kashmiri people lurking around in
civilian clothes, which hinted at their being from the secret service.
There were sniffer dogs deployed and it felt as if that small Kashmiri
village had been shut down for the day. Early on Sunday morning, the prime
minister of our great nation arrived in his Air India One Mi-17 V5
helicopter. The huge rotor blades were spinning in the air and the vibrations
stirred the leaves on trees. Several men were running around in their black
suits, the crowd was shouting his name, the barricades were almost breaking.
People from far-flung areas of Kashmir had gathered for a single glance of
the man; the police, military and other security personnel looked alert.
He emerged out of his mechanical bird, smiling and waving to
everyone. Several high-profile Jammu and Kashmir officials had gathered to
receive him, and he shook hands with many.
Waving and applauding, he looked really generous, social and happy.
I was there along with five other children from the shelter to present
him a bouquet of flowers. We were to move straight to our school along with
the convoy. I had been briefed by an army major from RR just a day before
regarding the arrangements and about our expected ‘code of conduct’. He
was the in-charge of local security in Tral.
Just as the prime minister took a few more steps I saw those black
uniforms again!
Two of them jumped out behind him from the same helicopter and a
few more from other helicopters were jumping out like black cats…swift,

quiet and alert. All the black cats were masked and only their eyes were
visible, but I could feel his presence around.

He was one of them, I was sure of that.
I was numb for a moment and then my stomach began to churn and
my heart began to beat menacingly, sweat trickled down my face and my
eyes widened in shock. I clutched my stomach and almost collapsed to the
ground.
The kids turned to me, hassled. ‘What happened ? What happened?
Get up! Get up! The prime minister sahib is here.’
Their voices awakened me from my trance and I managed to regain
my strength. The kids heaved a sigh of relief. How embarrassing though! I
was supposed to look after them.
I don’t care about anyone now, I told myself. Black cats, white cats
or no cats! I don’t even like cats. To hell with everyone! And even if he is
here it does not bother me a bit. I hate him from the bottom of my heart. I
know this and I am firm about it.
The little thought bubbles assured me of my sanity, and I repeated it
to myself several times until I was signalled to greet the prime minister. The
poor army JCO who was tasked to take us to him had to literally shout the
instructions before I understood.
But trust me, I was absolutely normal. Okay! Fine! I might have been
a little distracted.
It was a glorious moment. The kids offered him the flowers which he
accepted humbly and shook hands with me. Yes, he actually shook hands
with me and I could hardly control myself from jumping. Man! I had just
shaken hands with the most powerful man in India. I swore that I would vote
for him next time, even though I had never participated in any election
before.
He patted the kids and chatted with them for a while. I was
mesmerized by his magnanimous personality and then I suddenly felt as if
someone was watching me intently. I looked around and could not see
anyone doing so. All the NSG guys were scattered by now and some joined
the prime minister’s security bubble, and it was impossible to identify them.
They all looked identical.
The prime minister moved ahead towards his convoy of bulletproof
vehicles and we were hurriedly escorted into one of those vehicles by some
other officials. The crowd was scattering but the chants of his name were
reaching the sky.
Kashmir was so welcoming. Who knew!
The school looked like a Kashmiri bride from a distance. Glowing in
its own beauty! As if it had realized its magic for the first time and now
mesmerized the world with it. The building was freshly painted. The wooden

windows and ornate pillars were reflecting the fresh varnish. The
snowcapped mountains were glowing in the sunlight, the chinar trees were
standing tall in their golden glory, while the cold air smelt of saffron harvest.
The chinar trees were changing their colours and turning a dusty shade of
red before shedding their leaves. The typical Kashmiri autumn day felt more
pleasant than usual.

This is the Kashmir of our dreams and it is not an illusion anymore.
The good days are here. The future generations would prosper, and the
bloodshed will be a thing of the past. I smiled as the Kashmir of my country
leapt before me in its full glory.

The halting screech of the black Mercedes interrupted my thoughts.
We stepped out of the car and saw a huge crowd gathered along with Mr
Khan. He presented the prime minister a gorgeous bouquet of fresh Kashmiri
flowers, which he humbly accepted only to pass it to his staff.

The prime minister was deep inside the security bubble and NSG
guards with masked faces were marching, waving their guns. We were
walking just a few steps behind him. I was happy in spite of all those black
uniforms around me. I smiled and glanced at the Tiranga inside the school
premises ready to be hoisted by the prime minister.

What a rare honour!
But suddenly there was a shift in the air. And next second, there was
a loud bang. An explosion!
There was a whistle of splinters as the glass from the school windows
exploded and a suffocating mix of powder and dust covered the venue. We
were blown off our feet. Before I could make out what had happened,
another smaller explosion went off somewhere in the school building.
And then I understood what had happened.
It was an attempt to assassinate the prime minister!!

13. That Stranger Again

Suddenly, there were people running around, howling and shouting. In a
fraction of a second, gunfire went off and then maddening chaos ensued. I
could see people terribly wounded by the explosion and dying shortly
afterwards.

I was enveloped by smoke and ashes, but luckily I was not hurt.
Nothing was visible at that moment but I wanted to check if the
prime minister was fine and I ran towards the school at once, where the
explosions had happened just a moment ago. Suddenly, someone pulled me
back by my arm rather gently and a million sparks flew across and a jolt
passed through my entire body.
My body temperature suddenly shot up, the hair on the back of my
neck stood up, my heart beat faster, the high voltage jolt turned my body into
an inferno. The current resonated not just in the skin but deep inside the
heart.
I could make out the person behind that touch which was one in a
million—Virat.
I turned around and saw a masked face with glaring red eyes. Our
eyes were locked for an intense moment. A tingling sensation swept across
my soul. It shook me to the core. No! Not again! I struggled to remove
myself from his grip. I wanted to go inside the school desperately now,
running far away from the man behind the mask, the same man who had
ruined my life every single time I met him.
I broke away from his grip, stepped back and ran a few steps, but he
reached out and grabbed me again. I tried to push him away and writhed
violently but that devil in black did not move an inch. He hissed and
tightened his grip around my arms and dragged me away this time.
I was shouting now, ‘Leave me! I said, leave me!’
But the utter chaos prevailing muffled my voice and it proved to be
of no good. People were running to and fro. I yanked and jerked his arm.
The grip loosened and I released myself from his grip and ran quickly back
towards the school. But he reached me in a minute and held me in a strong
grip, raising me above the ground and locking another arm around my neck.
He pulled me up straight into his arms.
I was trapped now.

‘Leave me! Leave me!’ I was shouting, but he did not pay any heed.
His hazel eyes looked dark and fathomless, and he tightened his grip
around me. Our gazes met and for a second the world was swallowed in
darkness. I squirmed a little, still in his arms, and inhaled deeply. My heart
was racing once again and my palms were sweaty now.
This man always had an effect on me, and I hated myself for that!
The bombs were still exploding, bullets were still firing but he was
moving swiftly, making moves, taking turns now, all the while carrying me
like a rubber doll. His gait was like an Olympic runner and he strode
effortlessly even with all his weapons, gear and me. He found a jeep with
logs of wood piled high in the back. He instantly pushed me inside the jeep,
slammed the door behind me and started the engine.
As the jeep began to move, I looked around to take in the view of the
place where I had spent the last several months. But I was startled by the
chaotic barrage of images around: the sirens of police cars, soldiers and
policemen running, ducking, firing at the terrorists, smoke rising from
exploding tear gas shells, resounding echoes of their gunfire, grenade
explosions and utter chaos.
It was too much to process. I became numb suddenly and blacked
out.
I was awoken by a sharp jerk to my body. When I sat up, I realized
that I was still in the jeep which was continuing its bumpy ride through the
steep tracks of the forested area with deep valleys on both sides. The road
had become less bumpy, but the turns became sharper. We swerved
dangerously with each turn, again and again. Suddenly the jeep doors
banged open and I was thrown to the ground, maybe ten feet, and landed
with a deafening splash in a shallow stream. For a second, I just lay face
down in the cold water in disbelief. The water rose up in my mouth and
nose, and sputtering, I raised my head and looked around. No one in sight.
Painfully I tried to adjust my body and picked myself up and began
to wade towards the bank.
I could still hear the gun fight going on, which meant I was still in
the area. That very thought sent shivers down my spine. I quickened my
pace to an unknown direction without knowing the coordinates. I began to
cry in frustration. All I had ever wanted in life was a little peace and
normalcy. A regular life away from horrible memories, not a volley of
bullets, bomb blasts and people dying around me every six months.
Was I cursed or was it some kind of past life karma?
You reap what you sow. Do good and receive well! Do bad and
receive worse! But what did I do to deserve this miserable life? I had never
even killed an ant in my entire life, maybe some mosquitoes, but I don’t

think that qualifies as serious enough to face bullets and blasts so often. I
had no answers and I cried some more.

A failed romance, a broken heart, a sinking career, a hopeless life,
disappointed parents and violent adventures now and then.

No one deserves a fate like this. My parents raised me with hope and
faith. They believed that I would grow up to lead a regular city life as an
independent, liberated woman standing on my own feet, to marry a man with
a house and car, then produce at least two grandkids for them with whom
they could play and spend the rest of their lives happily ever after.

Was that too much to hope for?
I, Riya Khanna, an engineer, an ex-corporate professional,
compassionate teacher and only child of my parents, was running across an
unknown jungle full of dangerous animals and even more dangerous people
through the brambles and the bushes to save my fucking life which I, either
way, had never valued much.
But that does not mean my parents deserved to shake their heads in
despair again while pointing fingers to each other for my reckless life with
the idea that one of my parents could not groom me well. All those heated
debates on failed parenting that started with Mom’s standard ‘It is all your
fault, I told you to check her a bit. But no! You would not listen, now pay the
price’ to Dad never actually reached a conclusion. Dad would also retaliate
with how my mom failed in her motherly duties to raise a daughter like me
who is never concerned about her life and future like ‘Sharma ji ki beti.’ My
mom would have a trillion incidents on her fingertips when she had asked
my dad to discipline me, but no, he never listened which eventually led to
my daredevil attitude. No one could ever reach a conclusion about whose
fault this was while raising me.
I was sure that if I managed to survive this one time, they would
surely disown me as well, if only they could escape the heart attacks.
I stopped for a while to catch my breath when I heard footsteps
behind me.
Startled and confused, I ran with full speed. I stumbled through the
dense forest. The small pointy plants almost pierced my torn shoes but every
time I would stop to catch hold of my breath, I could hear the footsteps
growing closer. Suddenly I spotted some ruins in the distance. I headed
towards them and found myself facing an old temple. I entered the temple
courtyard. Reeds and wild bushes had invaded the courtyard filled with
cobwebs, pigeon shit and a gloomy silence. Naked stones stared at me; a
horde of pigeons fluttered around, and flew out into the dusk. I moved out to
the adjacent room and came across a massive granite sculpture of Shiva. It
looked ancient, more like Buddha, except for the third eye on the forehead.

There were more statues of various Gods and Goddess and their disciples.
Even though the statues were damaged they exuded a regal mystery.

It was then that I heard a loud footstep nearby and I hid myself
behind the gigantic Shiva statue, holding my breath and standing steadily. A
few moments passed and I peeked out to find no one. Heaving a sigh of
relief, I turned around and suddenly saw the devil in black, with a gun in his
hand just beside me, staring at me intently. My jaw dropped, there was a
knot of dread in my stomach and a shriek came out of my mouth.

I tried to run again, but this time he gripped my arms and pulled me
towards him. I found myself staring into his eyes, his warm breath on my
face, and suddenly my nerves tingled, like always. There was a strong
current floating around in the air generating a palpable heat that was igniting
ferocious intensity.

He pulled off the mask and there it was…him…my apocalypse
standing right before me!

My world exploded once again.

14. Knight in Shining Armour

He was standing there, lean, angular, built like a marathon-runner, with an
unrelenting gaze that bored into me like a harpoon. He exuded a sense of
calm which only a man capable of hard, decisive action can have. But the
glint in his hazel eyes was still mesmerizing. The broad masculine
cheekbones still felt very warm and his full lips were still very inviting, but
wait, was he smiling?

Really?
My eyes narrowed suddenly and instinctively, I slapped him tight
across his face.
‘Ouch! Riya?’ He gasped.
‘I was thinking of kissing you. What’s the matter with you?’ The
confidence in his claim was astonishing.
‘What? Pervert!’ My cheeks were red with fury.
‘How dare you even think that way?’ I was shocked by his audacity,
like nothing had ever happened between us.
‘Why? What’s wrong? Haven’t you seen Bollywood movies where
the long separations are ended by some long kisses between the hero and
heroine?’ He sounded very sincere putting forward his stupid theory.
‘You know what, you are insane!’ I gritted my teeth. ‘How dare you?
Like really? You leave me like that, make no contact and then bump into me
like this and claim a kiss? Lunatic!’ My cheeks were red and my eyes were
blazing.
‘What do you mean by bumping into you like this?’ That was all he
had heard!
‘I mean you don’t even apologise to me. I cannot even find a speck
of remorse in your eyes. You are standing tall and proud before me and then,
you were chasing me like a serial killer with a gun in your hand and now you
ask me what’s wrong?’ My voice was filled with anguish.
‘Madam! If you don’t realize this, then let me tell you that I just
saved your life from a deadly terrorist attack where bombs and bullets were
really eager to say hello to you. And this is what I get? Where is the etiquette
and courtesy you learnt back in your school?’ he replied with a tinge of
mockery.

‘So? Is that not your duty? Are you not in the habit of saving damsels
in distress only to extract advantages later?’ I said sarcastically.

‘Okay! Speaking of advantages, what kind of advantages do you
mean exactly?’ he said and grinned mischievously.

I was distressed, infuriated, and yet the bastard before me was
making me smile. I mean, just a few days before I was battling hard to forget
my past and look at this narcissistic annoying man who was still trying to
prove his point.

It was frustrating!
‘I always thought you’d be a shitbag but now I realize that you are
just a pathetic male chauvinist who thinks women are objects of pleasure and
should be used without terms and conditions applied. Your hypocrisy does
not allow you to fulfil the promises you make to a woman and you feel free
to walk out of relationships or circumstances anytime you wish. Why oblige
a woman over some lovey-dovey stuff when you can just fulfil your desires?
Right?’ I asked.
‘This hurts!’ he said slowly.
‘What were you expecting? Flower beds, when one day you suddenly
decide to drop before me out of the blue? There is a coward hidden beneath
your black uniform holding sophisticated weapons, basically. This time too,
you did not have any intentions to face me or confront me. It was just your
call of duty that you had to unmask your real self before me,’ I said.
‘No! That is not true. I love you,’ he said calmly.
‘Drop it!! I warn you. Okay? How dare you say it again? Love? What
do you know about love? I struggled hard for my sanity repeating this same
sentence over and over again, which you used in the Taj. Life would have
been really easy for me if we would have just met and you never said it to
me. But you did and I believed you. That was my fault and you ruined my
life.’ Tears coursed down my cheeks like molten lava and I swallowed the
lump in my throat.
‘I know. I am sorry but I had no option before me. Trust me on this
but I always loved you and I don’t remember a single day when you did not
cross my mind,’ he said softly.
‘Oh! Please! Just shut up! When was the last time you had any
option? Keep your crap to yourself!’ I shouted.
I turned away and head for the exit. It was getting difficult for me
each passing second and I didn’t want to break down in his presence. I did
not want to give him the pleasure of seeing me in shambles. I hated him
from the bottom of my heart, and he needed to know that. I took off running
but before I could even go a few steps he caught up with me and grabbed my
hand.
‘Whoa! Where are you going?’ he said.

‘Leave me! Leave my hand. I will go wherever I wish.’ I tried to pull
my hand free.

‘Can’t you see it is dark outside and if you are suffering from some
kind of memory loss then let me remind you that you are still standing in one
of the most dreaded parts of Kashmir,’ he said.

‘I don’t care and it’s better to die than to be with you here. Leave
me!’ I said.

‘Are you an idiot? I understand our differences yet I am your
protector now and you cannot go anywhere until I tell you so. There are not
only terrorists here, but also a forest full of wild animals. You should know
that,’ he said.

‘I said leave me!’ I gritted my teeth and punched him on his shoulder.
‘Riya! Stop behaving like a kid. We are in enemy territory and it is
not safe here,’ he said while I tried hard to get free of his grip.
I was grappling with him like a wild cat and was astonished with the
sheer force that I could muster. Nevertheless, he was just ducking his head
casually. He lost his cool for a moment and pushed me toward the stone wall
behind me and bent both my hands behind my back only to trap them with
his hands. Our eyes were locked for a moment before I turned my face to
one side grudgingly.
I wouldn’t turn and face him, so he took a step around me and leaned
down to put his face in my line of sight. His warm breath was lingering on
my face and tingling my neck. The electric sparks surging out of our bodies
were so obvious and the air felt too heavy to breathe in. There was this
irrepressible tug, the curious magnetic pull drawing me towards him with a
ferocious intensity. It was almost beyond the realm of my own self-control.
I shut my eyes as quickly as I could and clenched my fists.
‘I accept whatever you say, and I deserve your hatred. I always knew
in my heart that I had lost you forever and I don’t blame you for that. No
woman would ever love a man who abandoned her like that. You have all the
right to hate me and I promise once I take you to a safe zone you can shoot
me with my own Glock pistol, and I won’t complain. But now please listen
to me. We are in Kashmir, that too in a forest where if animals don’t kill us,
a terrorist definitely will. And our best chances are if we stay right here till I
contact my pack and ask for reinforcements. Till then we need to hide. Do
you understand?’ he pleaded.
Out of his long speech, only two words ‘ Shoot me’ caught my
attention and the very thought pierced my heart like a dagger.
No! I didn’t mean that. Yes! I hated him, but no! I would die too. I
nodded absentmindedly.
He released me from his grip gently. I rubbed my wrists vigorously.
He looked apologetic but did not say anything. A few moments passed, we


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